Trip Report: Re:Invent 2021
I thought I would write up some thoughts from last week’s Re:Invent AWS Conference in Las Vegas.
First, I thought the conference was really well organised. It can’t be easy to organise an in person event for 40,000 people in these times of Covid. Yet I found everything very slick, registration was very slick, the helpers with flags very useful, the Expo hall was good and even the frequent walks between the Venetian and the Wynn no worse than most conferences I’ve been to (but with added exposure to sunshine).
?In terms of big announcements I think this was a Re:Invent of evolution rather than revolution. The announcements around sustainability reporting dashboards and architecture pillar are very welcome, both AWS and Amazon have done some great work in this area but we needed way to expose these in application deployment and I think AWS delivered here. From an enterprise IT management tooling point of view Inspector Next was my favourite of the announcements, scanning running instances, containers and container repos, without having to deploy an additional agent is huge for us and this looks like a well thought out and fleshed out product, thanks team. I also liked deploying landing zones with Terraform, hopefully the start of more Terraform integrations from AWS. I had the same discussion a number of times at conference, to me it doesn’t matter if Terraform is slightly better than Cloud Formation or vice versa, it’s the skills of developers we can hire and I’d say at present Terraform has 10x the market share of Cloud Formation. There was a lot of good fleshing out of networking too, there are a limited number of people who will be excited about viewing your deployed IP address ranges in one place but for some of us that will be a massive help.
?I thought the FSI track was well organised, the round table discussion on the Monday was an excellent way to kick this off. It’s really interesting to discuss with other organisations how we manage compliance structures and conversations with our regulators. I don’t think I’m breaking any Chatham House rules by saying a lot of our conversations revolve around finding people anywhere in the world with the Cloud Skills we need and why AWS sometimes needs to invent then simplify as well as add more features. I’m hiring BTW, so if you want to work with a really cool FinTech team inside one of the world largest and most diverse Banks drop me a line. And yes, I should register continuous compliance as a domain name, I speak about it enough.
?Special thanks are due to our AWS account team for organising meetings with the product teams, these are incredibly useful. It was really useful to discuss and feedback on everything from the security products roadmaps to ideas for Amazon Linux going forward with the people who can actually make a difference to these roadmaps. It was also nice to thank in person some of the people who have delivered enhancements for us in the last two years, it really does make our jobs easier and enhance the experience of our internal customers.
?The one controversy of conference seemed to be around Corey Quinn, and if some of his live tweet were, in the words of Swift, “casually cruel in the name of being honest”. My take is as follows. Raw Twitter is like every other social media mess, but filter it to topics you care about, in my case AWS and Linux, and it becomes an incredibly useful professional tool. I’ve learned a ton of useful AWS information from following experts I ?these fields and searching for topics. Corey was attempting to livestream the keynotes with a degree of snark and sarcasm to his analysis, and I spotted a lot of people following him at the conference. Humour is a tricky thing, I think 90% of his comments landed and one or two missed or could have been misinterpreted. That seems as good a ratio as anyone could manage and we wouldn’t follow him if the commentary was too dry. I don’t think it needed senior AWS figures responding as they did, AWS is a massive platform now and has a wide community around it, let’s not over police their comments.
?So overall a brilliant and useful conference and thank to everyone involved. I met so many people I’ve worked with over the years and it was great to catch up face to face again. The rest of the stories have to stay in Vegas, and yes we did get the tiger home safely.
Solution Architecture at Stripe
3 年Great write up. FYI the AWS Well Architected custom lenses are perfect for creating architectural best practices and patterns for different product teams within enterprises like HSBC. These would have been ideal back in the day to self service and scale good architecture principles that were defined by a central cloud team. It’s worth looking into.
Alistair, great article, and echoed from my colleagues who attended from Trend Micro
Great trip report and insight. Thanks for sharing.
Managing Partner - Head Middle East
3 年Hi Alistair McLaurin agree 100% on evolution rather than revolution it was great to all get-together but I left feeling a little flat. I expected more to be made of advancements in Bracket etc but that was quite small. I guess they have learnt from outposts on that one :-) The event as a whole was as ever very well organised and it was great to meet with old friends and make some new ones. One area I was disappointed in was with all the great conversations of sustainability there was way to much plastic in all the SWAG. Just looking at my 10-year jacket gives me static! Next year I would like to see a plastic-free conference. Always happy to have a conversation around continuous compliance with you as well :-) Chris
Systems engineering and security geek, sprinkled with AI. Googler. Love making things work, and stay that way...also happen to make beer. CISSP, ISSAP, ISSMP #42042
3 年Glad no tigers were hurt, did a mattress end up on the roof?